BEREA Paul Hubbard is worried about the obvious: Final cut day.
"You really just don't know," the rookie wide receiver says.
Yet, he is serious about becoming what peripherally seems is preposterous: Another Braylon Edwards.
At least, midway through a conversation after a camp practice, Hubbard said this:
"Like you said, I'm a track guy. I started football later on in life. But as I grasp more and more of the concepts of football, maybe I could be as good as him one of these days."
Him? Yeah, No. 17.
If one indulges the comparison, there are some similarities.
Both Edwards (6-foot-3, 215 pounds) and Hubbard (6-2, 225) are big, athletic wide receivers.
Both played in the Big Ten, Edwards at Michigan, Hubbard at Wisconsin.
Both showed big-play ability in the preseason opener. Edwards beat his man and forced a pass interference call that set up a touchdown. Hubbard adjusted to a ball he lost in the lights and made a 44-yard circus catch along the right sideline.
"I honestly do think we're both very athletic types," Hubbard said. "We can do a lot of things that other people can't."
Hubbard isn't out of his mind. He supplied the appropriate "but ..."
"But Braylon has the experience, and he's done it so much longer."
Edwards grew up in an NFL culture, the son of an NFL running back. At Michigan, he caught 252 passes for 3,542 yards and 39 touchdowns.
Edwards was heavily into track and football while growing up. Hubbard was more a track specialist. He joined Wisconsin's football team as a walk-on, but track was still his real deal.
He red-shirted in 2003 and caught a grand total of one pass in the 2004 and 2005 seasons. During that period, he was a major track star, at one point winning Big Ten championships in the 100-meter dash and the long jump.
When he finally got football playing time, he wasn't big time, catching 38 passes for 627 yards in 2006 and 14 passes for 305 yards in 2007.
General Manager Phil Savage saw potential. He factored in Wisconsin's offense, a run-first scheme that hardly accentuated Hubbard's ability.
Savage grabbed Hubbard in the sixth round, with the No. 191 overall pick. It was 188 picks lower than where Savage chose Edwards in 2005. From Hubbard's perspective, it's a foot in the door.
Who better than Browns scout Paul Warfield to help Hubbard resemble Edwards? Warfield, a Pro Football Hall of Fame receiver, has an unusual bond with Hubbard. Both of them were Big Ten long jump champions.
"I'm taking everything that I can from Mr. Warfield," Hubbard said. "When he comes up and talks to me, it's about things he's seen me do on film that I could do better.
"Maybe it's a release off the line of scrimmage. Maybe it's not looking in at the ball, knowing what the snap count is, just looking at the defender so I can get his hands off me faster.
"Stuff like that ... everything that's gonna make me a faster player and more dominant."
Wideouts coach Wes Chandler rides his group hard. No one can dismiss Chandler's knowledge — he went to four Pro Bowls and left the NFL with 8,966 receiving yards.
One Chandler pet peeve is young receivers taking their eyes off the ball to see if their feet are in bounds.
"On that 44-yard catch," Hubbard said, "I did the things I've been coached in this camp. Squeeze the defender. Catch the ball, and don't worry about the sideline. Just feel the sideline."
Hubbard has a feeling the Browns' offense will suit him well. He sees it as a latter-day version of the 1980s offense in which Chandler played for prolific Chargers teams.
"K2's father (Kellen Winslow) was on that team," Hubbard said. "Those guys were the ones who did this offense first."
First things first for Hubbard. Make the team now. Then make people believe he's in Braylon Edwards' league.
BIG TEN BROWNS
Paul Hubbard is one of 13 Browns who played college ball in the Big Ten. The complete list, taken from the 80-man camp roster:
Illinois: PK Jason Reda
Indiana: OL Isaac Sowells
Iowa: G Eric Steinbach, WR Kevin Kasper
Michigan State: DL Robaire Smith, DB Travis Key
Michigan: WR Braylon Edwards
Northwestern: RB Jason Wright
Ohio State: DB Brandon Mitchell
Penn State: RB Austin Scott, WR Joe Jurevicius
Wisconsin: OT Joe Thomas, WR Paul Hubbard
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